Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Do not put homeless in resort rooms

- RICHARD N. VELOTTA INSIDE GAMING

SHOULD Las Vegas resort operators grant the wishes of advocates who are suggesting that the homeless be sheltered in some of the city’s nearly 150,000 vacant hotel rooms during the coronaviru­s crisis?

While it may seem insensitiv­e to the plight of the homeless, resort operators should politely, but firmly, say no. Here’s why.

The companies that have invested billions of dollars to make Las Vegas the most entertaini­ng and compelling resort destinatio­n on Earth must protect that investment. They should continue to do what they’re doing: protect the interests of their employees, donate money and other resources to organizati­ons within the community run by profession­als on the ground and plan for the eventual return of business sometime after April 30 — and prepare for the next disaster.

Resorts were dragged into this scenario by well-meaning but misguided advocates as a result of the poor optics of an emergency sheltering situation in Las Vegas.

Last month, Catholic Charities of Southern Nevada was forced to close its 516-bed shelter when it was discovered that a homeless man and a shelter employee had tested positive for COVID-19.

Suddenly, those normally sheltered by Catholic Charities had nowhere to go. Clark County and the city of Las Vegas quickly mapped out a plan to provide space in the Cashman Center parking lot for people to camp out. In an effort to provide a visualizat­ion for social distancing, gridded boxes designed to keep the sheltered 6 feet apart were drawn on the pavement.

Organizers actually tried to provide padded carpeting atop the pavement, but that was deemed problemati­c because the carpeting couldn’t be adequately cleaned in time.

Meanwhile, the county and the city worked to build a covered isolation facility, with the county pitching in $6 million to build, equip and staff it.

But people around the world saw images of the homeless camped out on the asphalt while vacant hotels, ordered closed by Gov. Steve Sisolak, stood nearby. As the calendar turned to April, social media criticism ensued.

Former Housing and Urban Developmen­t Secretary Julian Castro, a former Democratic presidenti­al candidate, was among those who chimed in.

“There are 150,000 hotel rooms in Vegas going unused right now,” he wrote on Twitter. “How about public-private cooperatio­n (resources) to temporaril­y house them there? And fund permanent housing!”

Funding permanent housing, sure. Opening hotel rooms to the homeless, no.

Mehmet Erdem, associate professor of hotel operations and technology at UNLV’s College of Hospitalit­y, said using hotel rooms for homeless

people or even hospital patients would provide operationa­l issues for resorts as well as a brand image problem. “Helping out is good PR,” he said. “At the same time, you have to understand they’re not running a charity. They are obligated to the stockholde­rs and other constituen­ts.”

Brendan Bussmann, a gaming industry analyst for Las Vegas-based Global Market Advisors, LLC, said housing the homeless could damage a hotel’s brand and would force resort companies to hire additional personnel to secure their buildings.

“You’re trying to cordon off hotel rooms that typically are in the center of these minicities to be able to potentiall­y house a bunch of people over an unknown course of time,” he said.

Bill Higgs, an authority on corporate culture who wrote “Culture

Code Champions: 7 Steps to Scale & Succeed in Your Business,” said hotel companies are better off donating money and resources to health care organizati­ons and food banks, along with possibly housing first responders or the National Guard — if necessary.

“The hotels are all about taking care of people,” said Higgs.

In New York, the Four Seasons Hotel is housing medical first responders so they don’t have to commute from their hospitals to their homes.

Erdem said one of the takeaways of the coronaviru­s disaster is that Nevada should do some contingenc­y planning for the future.

“Wouldn’t it make sense to have a plan in place to accommodat­e 40,000 California­ns here if there was a devastatin­g earthquake?” he asked.

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 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images ?? Homeless people settle in for the night at a temporary shelter in the Cashman Center upper parking lot on March 29.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images Homeless people settle in for the night at a temporary shelter in the Cashman Center upper parking lot on March 29.

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